Most cybercriminals are motivated by one thing: money. Some want to cause disruption or gain notoriety, but the majority are after financial gain - either by tricking schools into transferring funds, or by stealing and selling personal data.
That second motivation is why cybersecurity and data protection are two sides of the same coin. When criminals target your school's data, they're targeting the personal information of your pupils and staff. Protecting that data isn't just good practice - it's a legal requirement.
Cybersecurity is a GDPR issue
The UK GDPR requires that personal data is processed securely, using appropriate technical and organisational measures. As attacks on schools increase, cybersecurity is one of the most important ways schools can meet that obligation.
The National Cyber Security Centre and the ICO developed a set of GDPR security outcomes built around four aims:
Three ways to align cybersecurity and data protection in your school
When reporting a data breach to the ICO, one of the first questions they'll ask is whether a cyber attack caused it - and what measures you had in place. Being able to answer that confidently starts now.
Not sure where your school stands? Cyber score gives you a free, instant picture of your cybersecurity posture, mapped against the standards your school is already expected to meet.
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